We purchased property in Tn 2 years ago. We had a verbal agreement with children to pay us back. Each child in agreement to have a piece of property for a home. Payments have been made for over a year but now one has moved and no longer wants to pay anything. We have tried to adjust payment to make it easier, that payment change was accepted for a while but now, they no longer want to pay anything. We do have some emails and text msgs that support the verbal agreement and some bank history of previous payments made. Will a verbal agreement stand up in court if we try to get our money back ? What is that process ? Thank you
You write that "
we purchased property". Then you add: "
we had a verbal agreement with the children to pay us back."
My understanding then is that in stead of loaning the children the money to buy property for their homes you and mother purchased a plot of ground. And that you did so with the verbal understanding that it would be split up and parceled off to each child (we don't know how many) whom would then in turn pay some unknown but agreed price for their individual parcel of land.
Now because some have reneged on their agreement you want to know how to get your money back.
To begin I don't agree that the issue involves a loan of money to the children. But rather an issue of upholding or enforcing the unwritten agreement. And it is the verbal nature of the bargain that you foresee as troubling. To me that isn't necessarily a prohibiting factor as there may be sufficient evidence of partial performance - actual possession, periodic payments, etc., etc. - to avoid the defense of the statute of frauds.
Where I see the stumbling block is in your inability to prove the essential terms of each of these separate and independent verbal agreements with the degree of certainty necessary for their enforcement. * For example the price of each separate parcel, an adequate legal description of each individual parcel (very difficult to determine the precise piece of real estate being sold by verbally describing it), the terms of sale, price, periodic deferred payment schedules, interest rates, conveyance of title, remedies upon default, etc. , etc. Also, there must be shown in such terms the presence of what is known as mutuality of obligation.
Putting the shoe on the other foot (or feet) the same lack of certainty as to the details of the verbal agreements would seem to undermine any action by a given child for specific performance.
In court? To be honest I think you'd be floundering.
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[*] An agreement may lack contractual force because it is so vague or uncertain that no definite meaning can be given to it without adding further terms.